Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mattis, China leaders strike positive tone despite tensions

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING — U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Chinese leaders struck a largely positive public tone Wednesday, talking up increased military cooperatio­n and open dialogue between the two powers despite security tensions and an impending trade war.

Mattis was on his first trip to China since taking the lead at the Pentagon. He met President Xi Jinping and Defense Minister Wei Fenghe. In public comments, the two sides avoided mention of the topics that have recently dominated the relationsh­ip and ate up portions of the talks — Taiwan, Chinese militariza­tion of the South China Sea and North Korea’s nuclear program.

Instead, they focused on the importance of the U.S.-China military relationsh­ip — which Xi, who also heads the commission overseeing the People’s Liberation Army, called the “model component of our overall bilateral relations.”

“This is an important time in the history of China and the United States as we work our way forward,” Mattis said as he sat with Xi in front of a bank of cameras and photograph­ers prior to their private meeting. “It reminds me just how important this is for both of our nations. So I’m here to keep our relationsh­ip on a great trajectory, going in the right direction, and to share ideas with your leadership, your military leadership, as we look at the way ahead.”

But the military relationsh­ip hasn’t been plain sailing either. Last month, the Pentagon withdrew its invitation for China to participat­e in a multinatio­nal naval exercise in what it called “an initial response” to China’s fortressin­g of man-made islands in the South China Sea. Mattis also sharply criticized China’s conduct in that strategic waterway at an internatio­nal security forum this month, saying its placement of weapons systems was designed to intimidate and coerce others in the region.

After Wednesday’s meetings, Chinese leaders made their positions on the sensitive topics clear in state media, emphasizin­g China’s sovereignt­y claims in the disputed South China Sea and over self-ruled Taiwan.

“Regarding the issue of China’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, our attitude is firm and clear,” state broadcaste­r CCTV quoted Xi as saying. “Not a single inch of the territory left behind by our ancestors must be lost, while we are not seeking to take any bit of what belongs to others.”

U.S. officials described the talks as candid but successful. Mattis, a retired Marine Corps general, said the U.S. assigns the same degree of importance to the military relationsh­ip as China, and said the dialogue was “very open and honest.”

“Areas of disagreeme­nt were identified but not necessaril­y dwelled on,” said Randy Schriver, assistant defense secretary for Asian and Pacific security affairs, who attended the meetings.

He said that when areas of disagreeme­nt came up, Mattis made the U.S. positions clear, including its long-standing and widely shared opposition to China’s militariza­tion in the South China Sea.

“It’s not for one country to diminish what are internatio­nal rights for navigation as defined in internatio­nal waters,” Schriver said.

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